The research that led to this incredible find was led by Kourosh Kalantar-Zadeh and Torben Daeneke from RMIT’s School of Engineering. Alongside their students, they worked on the material’s development for over a year.

“When you write with a pencil, the graphite leaves very thin flakes called graphene, that can be easily extracted because they are naturally occurring layered structures,” explains Daeneke.

“But what happens if these materials don’t exist naturally? Here we found an extraordinary, yet very simple method to create atomically thin flakes of materials that don’t naturally exist as layered structures.”

To create the 2D material, the team dissolved metals in liquid metal to create very thin oxide layers capable of being peeled away.

Daeneke explains that process to create the oxide layer is very simply, like “frothing milk when making a cappuccino”. It doesn’t take much technical expertise to do, so anyone could, theoretically, do it — that said, it’s unclear if you actually should.

Improved electronics

While the new material is expected to be a new tool in chemistry, it also promises to improve our existing electronics. In fact, it’s believed it could enhance data storage capabilities and make electronics faster.

You see, once the oxide layers are peeled away, they could be used as transistor components in modern electronics to make them faster while requiring less power; this is only possible due to how thin they are.

Oxide layers are also used to make the touch screens we’ve become intimately familiar with, which suggests that companies could use this material to make more responsive touch screens, or people could even eventually learn to make their own screens.

“Many of these atomically thin oxides are semiconducting or dielectric materials. Semiconducting and dielectric components are the foundation of today’s electronic and optical devices. Working with atomically thin components is expected to lead to better, more energy efficient electronics. This technological capability has never been accessible before.”

The team didn’t specify exactly how their 2D material might impact data storage, but we can speculate that it could make transferring data faster than ever before.

Sony’s latest series of SD Cards are touted as “the world’s fastest,” possessing impressive speeds of 300 MB/s. What if similar capabilities could be given to commercialised hard drives or used to enhance cloud storage?

Of course, if the RMIT University team’s research is anything like the low-power semiconductors Stanford engineers were developing in August, or the one-dimensional material proposed last year by University of Texas scientists, it’ll be some time before we see the 2D material incorporated into everyday hardware.

Perhaps even longer than expected, as even the team neglected to mention when their research might be available to be utilised. Once-in-a-decade discoveries do require extensive work post-discovery and additional confirmation before they can change the world.